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May 6, 2014

Crusty Cheese and Onion Bread

This Crusty Cheese and Onion Bread, with its crispy and cheesy crust and soft savory interior, is totally captivating.

I took one of the loaves to work, and it disappeared immediately.

One of my favorite "foods" is burnt cheese. If you are with me on this, you will love this bread. It was really hard not to pick off every last bit of it.
The cheese is rolled up into the dough, kind of like cinnamon swirl bread (only with cheese), and the cheese just oozes out of the slashes on top as the bread expands in the oven.

This bread uses a sourdough starter to develop flavor. The final dough also includes some instant yeast, so you don't have to totally rely on your starter for the dough to rise and you still get that faint sourdough tang.

The dough for this bread can be made up to four days in advance, and then shaped and baked at your convenience. This bread also freezes very well after baking.

For the cheese, I rummaged through my fridge for whatever cheese I had on hand, and used a combination of bits of mozzarella, gruyere, and cheddar (mostly gruyere) and was really happy with the results. As long as some of the cheese you use is "melty," any cheese will work.

I also used a sweet onion for the onion component. Feel free to experiment with red onions, scallions, chives, or even caramelized onions. Mmmmmm.

Crusty Cheese and Onion Bread

Ingredients

For the Starter

1/4 C/2 ounces/56.5 grams sourdough starter

1 1/3 C/6 ounces/170 grams unbleached bread flour

1/2 C/4 ounces water

Final Dough

All of the starter

1 C/8 ounces/227 grams lukewarm water

1/2 C/4 ounces lukewarm milk

2 1/4 tsp/7 grams instant yeast

1 1/2 tablespoons honey

4 1/2 C/20 ounces/567 grams unbleached bread flour

2 tsp/14 grams salt

1 3/4 C/7 ounces/198 grams diced sweet onion

2 1/2 C/12 ounces/340 grams grated cheese of your choice

Instructions

Mix the starter ingredients and let sit, covered, until nearly doubled. Either use immediately or refrigerate up to 4 days.

To make the dough, break up the starter into pieces and combine with the water, milk, yeast and honey. Stir until fairly mixed. Add the flour and salt except and knead with a dough hook for 5 minutes on low. Let sit for 5 minutes. Knead on medium low for five minutes more, adjusting to achieve a tacky but not sticky dough.

Add the onions and mix for about a minute on low.

Place the dough into an oiled bowl, cover, and refrigerate overnight or up to 4 days. If you plan to make the loaves on different days, divide the dough in half before refrigerating.

On baking day, take the dough out of the refrigerator and let sit for about 2 hours.

Divide the dough in half on a lightly floured surface, and gently press the dough into two 8 by 12 inch rectangles. Spread the cheese over each half and roll up the dough like cinnamon bread. Seal the seam and shape the dough into a batard or baguette.

Place the loaves on a parchment lined baking sheet, spray with oil, and cover with plastic wrap. Allow to rise for about 90 to 120 minutes. They should be puffy. (If the loaves are too big, you might have to use two pans).

Place a baking stone on the middle rack of the oven and preheat the oven to 450 degrees F and prepare the oven with a steam pan on the bottom rack. Slash the loaves with 3 diagonal cuts and place the pan(s) in the oven. Pour a cup of hot water into the steam pan, shut the door, and turn the oven down to 425 degrees F (218 C).

Bake or 30 to 40 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through, until they are deep golden brown and the internal temperature is about 195 degrees F (90 degrees C).

Cool on a wire rack for about an hour.

Yield: 2 large loaves

Recipe adapted from Artisan Breads Every Day by Peter Reinhart. This is one of my all time favorite bread books. The croissant recipe in the book is my all time favorite.

As I was sharing on G+, I suddenly remembered a muffin post I wrote a while back that has a photo I am sure you would appreciate. Scroll down to the baked muffins and I am sure you will see which one I mean. :) http://www.foodlustpeoplelove.com/2013/08/thyme-chevre-blackberry-muffins.html